INDEX TO VOL. I. A A DULTERY, 57. Defined, ib. A capital offence AUSTIN, St.-his teftimony concerning concubinage, ADULTERY, mifchiefs of, 65. ABRAHAM and Hagar, 117, and n. ALEXANDER III. Pope, his conftitution concerning post- legitimation, 34. ADAM and Eve, their creation-no precedent to be ABISHAG the Shunamite, 169. ANSELM, Archbishop of Canterbury, makes a canon ABIMELECH, cafe of, 281. VOL. II. Ff ARTICLE, ARTICLE, SEVENTH, of the church of England, quoted ABROGATION, doctrine of, borrowed from the Mabo- B OLINGBROKE, Lord, a fentiment of his, 7, n. BIGAMY, ftatute of 1 Jac. c. 11, preamble of, 181, n.. 206. BELLARMINE, his teftimony for the Pope's power to BANTAM, more females than males born there, 107. BEREANS, their example to be followed, 248. BOTTLES, leathern, mistaken for glass, 371. BUCER, on concubinage, 407, 408. BARBEYRAC obferves that Grotius changed his opinion BAPTISM, no new law of CHRIST, C 350. RUCIFIX, an heathen invention, Pref. p. xiv. n. CONCUBINE, what, 53, 54, and n. COROLLARIES on the nature and obligation of mar- COMMANDMENT, the feventh, does not forbid poly- gamy, 121. CHURCH, in 4th century, made no diftinction between CELIBACY CELIBACY condemned, 177 & feq. Of the clergy, CONTINENCY, where to be prayed for, 186. CARTHUSIANS would not eat fleb to fave their lives, 189. CORINTHIANS lewd and debauched to a proverb, 220. plained, ib. & feq. CESAR, his account of community of wives among Britons, 231, n. CONCUBINES approved in the church, 31, 32, n. Ex- the CAVE, Dr. allows that the primitive Chriftians carried CERINTHUS, his creed, 347. CHRIST not a giver of a new law, 320. His offices, 357. COMMERCE of the fexes, an object of the moral law, 362. CANON LAW, Popifh, affirms the church to be above CLERGY, their marriage made felony, 207, 208. D D OWER among the Jews, 26. DEUT. XXIV. 1. confidered and explained, 85, 86, DEUT. xxii. 28, 29. explained, p. 28, 29. DIVORCE, Jewish, did not operate as a diffolution of DEUT. xxi. 15. a conclufive argument for polygamy, 112. DAVID has many wives given to him, 114. DRUSILLA forfakes her husband and marries Felix, 386. Ff2 E E XOD. xxii. 16. explained, 24, 25, 26. ECCLESIASTICAL Courts, their views of mar- their oppreffion and ty- , 66, n. Ought to be abolished, 67. 5, 25, and n. of the faints in old time are for our instruc ВАСС BUXT BIGAM BELLARM make an BOTTLES, BUCER, BARBEY conce 394 BAR BERT w la In heath Christianity by what, 62, 54 chg natu GROTIUS Owns the Jewish law allowed polygamy, 251, n. H changes his opinion, 394. H ENRY II. of France, a faying of his on papal dif- HILLELL, 82. HUSBAND, defined, 43, n. HORACE quoted on navigation, 103, n. bility of words, 59, n. On the muta- HAGAR's marriage with Abram not finful, 142, n. HERODIAS leaves her husband, and marries his brother, IPHIL-conjugation, how expreffed by the Hellenifts, I *S xix. 1, &c. confidered, 55. us introduces the faying of a Jew on the cre- he New Teftament, 94, n. the caufe of the Jewish polygamy, 93 by the act of the high-priest Jehoia- |